Latest News Fri, Feb 9, 2024 7:48 AM
In London, buildings account for an estimated 68 per cent of London’s carbon emissions. These emissions arise from the construction, operation, and demolition of buildings.
If London is to meet the Mayor’s 2030 net zero target, there is an urgent need to reduce emissions from buildings and to retrofit our housing stock.
The London Assembly Planning and Regeneration Committee carried out a two-part investigation into London’s built environment, focussing on how decisions are made to either retrofit or rebuild properties and the carbon implications for both.
Whilst operational carbon emissions (the energy used to run buildings, heating and cooling systems) are regulated through building regulations, the Committee found during its investigation that embodied carbon is treated differently, and the building industry is not currently required nationally to measure and reduce the embodied carbon arising from construction.
Whole Life-Cycle Carbon (WLC) Assessments are a way of measuring all the emissions arising during the entire lifecycle of a building, from its construction to its potential demolition or change of use. The London Plan 2021 set a policy requirement for developers to carry out WLC Assessments for major developments, to be submitted during planning stages.
The Committee has published a report – ‘Retrofit vs Rebuild?’ - with six recommendations for the Mayor and Government, including:
Sakina Sheikh AM, Chair of the London Assembly Planning and Regeneration Committee, said: “The UK must take serious action to meet the challenge of climate change.
“With 68% of London’s carbon emissions coming from its buildings, it’s clear that planning policy can be the key to unlocking climate action. Whole Life Carbon assessments would provide essential support for developers and planning authorities to reduce carbon in how they construct.
“Retrofitting existing buildings and homes can make people warmer and lessen the impact on their energy bills. The Government can make retrofitting more financially viable by heeding the calls from industry to reduce the VAT builders currently have to pay to retrofit.
“The Committee believe that the cross-party recommendations in this report can help London build the homes we need whilst meeting our aspiration of reaching net zero by 2030.
“The Government and Mayor must work together to achieve this.”
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